Monday, March 31, 2014

March 31, 2014 (Operation Rescue) - By now abortionists around the nation are well aware that Operation Rescue and other pro-life organizations are accessing
public 911 records to verify and document abortion-related medical
emergencies that are often witnessed by street activists outside
American abortion clinics.

In some instances, abortion clinics have resorted to using private ambulance services
that are not subject to open records laws. Others have pressured county
records officials to over-redact public information in order to hide
the seriousness of all-too-common abortion-related emergencies from the
public.

In extreme situations, abortionists even have been known to violatepatient care standards by transporting women suffering life-threatening abortion complications to emergency rooms using private vehicles so as not to draw attention to their latest medical mishaps.
However, in Texas, the monolithic Planned Parenthood abortion clinic in Houston recently resorted to new tactics to obfuscate the severity of an abortion-related medical emergency and confuse anyone who might access the 911 record.
During a call to 911 placed on December, 14, 2013, from the towering Houston Planned Parenthood abortion clinic on Gulf Freeway, the caller
is heard using medical abbreviations and “shorthand” terminology to
conceal the fact that an abortion patient was suffering uncontrolled
bleeding and heavy blood loss.
But the tactic backfired and served only to confuse the dispatcher and delay emergency care to the hemorrhaging abortion patient, who was eventually transported to Ben Taub Hospital in Houston.Listen to the full 911 recording here.
This transcribed excerpt is revealing of the lengths to which Planned
Parenthood will go to conceal the fact that its abortionists are hurting
women:

Planned Parenthood Caller: We have a 33-year old G-6, P-2 –Dispatcher: Okay, what does that mean?Planned Parenthood Caller: Um, she’s – um, been pregnant six times and has two living children.Dispatcher: Okay. How old –Planned Parenthood Caller: — Transport with IV running from ASC to Ben Taub. Um, she is status post complete A-B.Dispatcher: What does that mean?Planned Parenthood Caller: Abortion.Dispatcher: Okay –Planned Parenthood Caller: — With an EBL of 500.Dispatcher: EBL?Planned Parenthood Caller: Estimated blood loss.Dispatcher: Oh, okay.Planned Parenthood Caller: And she has no drug allergies.Dispatcher: But she needs to go to Ben Taub — why?Planned Parenthood Caller: Because she’s having some, um, bleeding that we can’t control.Dispatcher: Oh, okay, okay, okay. That’s what I needed to know.

It
took a long two minutes and six seconds into the 911 call before the
dispatcher finally understood why the Planned Parenthood worker had called.
To translate, Planned Parenthood had just completed an abortion on a
patient who was essentially hemorrhaging and had already lost 500
milliliters of blood in a relatively short time. The abortionist on duty
could not control the bleeding, so they requested emergency transport
from Planned Parenthood (an ASC or Ambulatory Surgical Center) to the hospital.
Just to give an idea of how much 500 ml of blood is in terms of American
measures, she had lost approximately 17 ounces of blood – about half of
the allowable blood loss for an average-sized woman undergoing surgery.
“If Planned Parenthood thinks their ‘insider lingo’ will outsmart us,
they completely underestimate the Pro-life movement. This kind of
nonsense is actually endangering the lives of women and delaying their
access to emergency care when every minute might mean the difference
between life and death,” said Operation Rescue President Troy Newman.
“It just goes to show that for Planned Parenthood, covering up their
mistakes takes priority over the lives and health of women.”Reprinted with permission from Operation Rescue

3 legal reasons why abortion should be banned

1) Murder is illegal.Murder is the “unlawful killing of a human being” with some level of intent. California law includes “a deliberate intention unlawfully to take away the life of a fellow creature.”
The only thing preventingabortion from being included in the definition of murder is that it’s currently not “unlawful.” But basic science proves that an unborn child
is a “human being.” No mention of “personhood” is necessary for basic
murder definitions. Killing a “human being” or a “fellow creature,”
even, is enough.
Why, as a society, do we pick and choose human beings
whom we can deliberately kill? These human beings are fully human,
entirely innocent, and helpless and voiceless. Yet we purposely target
them, setting very few restrictions on their killings.Is there any other class of human beings that our society will make it “lawful” to kill? Belgium is already on the path to extending legal murder through its legalization of euthanasia – even child euthanasia. History shows that Nazi Germany,
once it began to legalize the murder of human beings, simply continued
down the path – the elderly, the sick, the disabled, gypsies,
homosexuals, the Jews, those who defended the Jews. Where would it have
stopped?
This is why abortion must be illegal if murder is illegal. It should never be “lawful” to kill any innocent human being.2) The 14th Amendment was designed to protect classes of people like the unborn.
At the time the 14th Amendment was adopted, abortion was already illegal or being made illegal throughout the nation.

The criminalization of abortion accelerated during the 1860s, and by 1900 it was generally considered a felony in every state.

Thus, there was no reason for Congress to specifically discuss the unborn in their debate on the 14th Amendment. The unborn were already a protected class in the U.S.
However, during the debate on the 14th Amendment, Senate Sponsor Jacob Howard explained that it was essential for every man (or human being) to be equal in regard to the basic right to life:

I urge the amendment for the enforcement of these essential provisions of your Constitution, divine in their justice,
sublime in their humanity, which declare that all men are equal in the
rights of life and liberty before the majesty of American law.

It establishes equality before the law, and it gives to
the humblest, the poorest, the most despised of the race the same rights
and the same protection before the law as it gives to the most
powerful, the most wealthy, or the most haughty.

House sponsor John Bingham further explained the intent when he argued, as Robert C. Cetrulo writes, that “the Amendment was intended to be ‘universal’ and to apply to ‘any human being.’ Fourteenth Amendment rights were intended not only to ‘pertain to American citizenship but also to common humanity.’”3) Federal laws already protect the unborn.

Federal law
prohibits the death penalty for pregnant women until they give birth.
(18 U.S.C.A. S.3596) In essence, the law declared that an innocent
unborn person cannot be sentenced and put to death for a crime
he did not commit. If the unborn child were not seen as a person in
the eyes of the law, there would be no need for this prohibition.
Common law typically prohibited the execution of a pregnant woman until birth, though its prohibition was not even as strong as the current federal law. The U.S. Supreme Court (in Union P. R. Co. v. Botsford)
explained the purpose of the common law doctrine: “to guard against the
taking of the life of an unborn child for the crime of the mother.”
Inconsistently, the Court calls the unborn child a “child” and yet
refuses to recognize her as a person.

It’s wrong for a mother to have the right to kill her children. True feminists realize that our power doesn’t come through the blood of our children.
The UVVA specifically prohibits the killing of unborn children, defining them as follows:

… a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’ or
‘child, who is in utero’ means a member of the species homo sapiens, at
any stage of development, who is carried in the womb.

And yet, even with this powerful definition, the law makes exceptions
for mothers to give permission for their children to be killed.
How contradictory, tragic, and wrong.

Obama’s mandate imposes his views on all Americans

In a blatant inversion of reality, the New York Timeseditorial board is claiming that corporations want to “impose their religious views on their employees — by refusing to permit them contraceptive coverage as required under the Affordable Care Act.” In truth, the so-called contraception mandate imposes the views of President Obama (and the Times editors) on all Americans.
The Affordable Care Act (a.k.a Obamacare) gives the Executive Branch at least 40 regulatory powers that have the force of law. The Obama administration has exercised this authority tomandate that “most new and renewed health plans” cover “all FDA-approved forms of contraception” without any copayments.

This means that nearly all Americans who pay for health insurance—whether they are private citizens, business owners,
or taxpayers—are required to pay for the products that Obama demands.
This is not about the legality of these products but forcing everyone to
pay for them, whether they want to or not. In short, the mandate denies
everyone the freedom to purchase a healthcare policy that covers what
they want, instead of what the President wants.

Proponents of the mandate
often focus on employees who want these items paid for by health
insurance provided by their employers, but they completely ignore the
business owners and other employees who don’t want to pay for these
items. This is a critical omission, because when government forces all health plans to pay for certain items, all of the insured are forced to pay for them through their insurance premiums.

Thus, regardless of whether the mandate is upheld by the Supreme Court or
struck down in part or in whole, the only people who are in danger of
having someone else’s views forced down their throats are those who
don’t want to pay for these products. Everyone else would still be free
to buy them as they wish.

Similarly, CNN recently stated that Rush Limbaugh “called Georgetownlaw student
Sandra Fluke a ‘slut’ and ‘prostitute’ for her support of women’s
access to birth control.” This is a gross mischaracterization of the
facts. Everyone in the U.S. already had “access to birth control.” What Fluke demanded is that others be forced to pay for it.
Moreover, Fluke argued that others must buy her the precise type of birth control
she prefers. She didn’t want to pay for it, and she didn’t want whoever
she was having sex with to pay for it. Instead, she wanted others with
no role in her sex life to pay for it. That is not about “access” but
coercion.
Proponents of the mandate have also been actively spreading falsehoods about the devices and drugs that the mandate covers. The scientific facts are clear that some of these products destroy viable human embryos, which is abortion or tantamount to it.

Yet, NPR, the New York Times, and others are obscuring these facts by misrepresenting scientific studies
and uncritically quoting scientists who are donors to Obama—without
even identifying them as such. These realities are scrupulously
documented in Just Facts’ article, “Does the Obama mandate force you to pay for abortions?”
While people can argue endlessly about the pros and cons
of this mandate, let’s make no mistake about who is seeking to impose
their views on others: It is the people who support the mandate, not
those who don’t want to be forced to pay for products that others
demand.

The article originally appeared at JustFacts and is reprinted with permission.

Plan B: It’s not just a contraceptive

As the “Hobby Lobby case” (aka Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. v. Sebelius) is underway at the Supreme Court
in our nation’s capital, this may be a good time to review what all the
fuss is about. Hobby Lobby’s owners, as well as those of Conestoga
Woods (the company fighting the HHS mandate along with Hobby Lobby), are
Christian. As such, they believe that causing the intentional death of
an innocent person is a moral evil, and
they object to what they view as being party to those deaths by being
forced to pay for abortifacient drugs, which can cause such deaths.
Many groups – including Christian groups
and some pro-lifers – have cried foul over this allegation, claiming
that the belief that certain contraceptives can also cause abortions is
false. They believe that the birth control pill, condoms, IUDs, Plan B, ella, etc. are all just contraceptives that prevent sperm and egg from joining. This is true for some forms of contraception,
like condoms and spermicides, which can only inhibit the mobility of
sperm and have no effect once sperm and egg are joined as a new human
life. Other contraceptives can take the process a step farther, though,
and when they fail to serve as contraceptives (aka, conception does take
place), they can also make a woman’s body hostile to the newly formed
embryo and cause the child to be expelled.
Some confusion has been swirling, however, about what constitutes a pregnancy, and how emergency contraceptives like Plan B actually work. Consequently, a crusade has been brewing against the allegation that hormonal contraceptives and emergency contraception can cause abortions. But the bottom line is that they can.The definition of “pregnancy” has been changed over time. Groups like the ACOG (the American College
of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) have altered the definition of
pregnancy over the years (notably, in 1965 and 1972). Rather than
acknowledging (as the science of embryology universally does) that a new, unique human life
begins to exist during the process of fertilization (which occurs
outside the uterus), ACOG now posits that pregnancy does not begin until
implantation in the uterus occurs. This means that they do not
recognize the existence of a pregnancy until after an embryo has
successfully burrowed into his or her mother’s uterus and found it
hospitable to life. By this newer, questionable definition of pregnancy
(arguably motivated by an anti-life agenda), embryos expelled from their mother’s bodies before implantation are essentially unworthy of any mention.
But pro-lifers know that, regardless of where a living embryo is in his or her mother’s body, this is a human worthy of recognition, protection, and respect.
Now, although emergency contraceptive
drugs are designed with the purpose of preventing ovulation, or
preventing sperm from reaching an egg if ovulation does occur, a third mode of actionis possible when
the first two fail: Plan B’s “plan C,” so to speak, is to cause a
woman’s body to expel the embryo that is formed when the first two modes
of action have failed. There is no way to know how frequently this occurs, and researchmay suggest that this mode of action is infrequent (prompting Plan B to seek removal of the FDA’s cautionary labeling, which is undoubtedly bad for sales). Nevertheless, by the FDA’s own admission:

If fertilization does occur, Plan B may prevent a fertilized egg from attaching to the womb (implantation).

“Fertilized egg”
here refers to a human embryo – a unique human being whose pregnant
mother may unknowingly suffer his or her loss after ingesting Plan B
(and even the birth control pill can have this effect on uterine lining).Plan B is different from RU-486 but can still be an abortifacient.
Individuals who cry foul over pro-lifers calling Plan B an
abortifacient often contend that only the RU-486 abortion drug can
actually cause an abortion. RU-486 does indeed work very differently
from Plan B does. The purpose of RU-486 is to terminate a pre-born child
who is successfully developing inside a woman’s uterus. It can be taken
well into the first trimester to induce abortion, and it consists of
two different drugs taken over a period of days. The first drug cuts off
the baby’s nutrition, while the second causes the uterus to contract
and expel the baby.
This is not how Plan B and other forms of emergency
contraception work. As previously stated, emergency contraception’s
primary goal is to either prevent ovulation or inhibit sperm and egg
from joining in fertilization. But, as the FDA affirms, the third mode
of action of Plan B is to “prevent a fertilized egg from attaching to the womb (implantation).”
Note that there is nowhere for this fertilized egg – aka the tiny human
being – to go, except to be expelled from the woman’s body. This is, effectively, an abortion. And this is why companies like Hobby Lobby take issue with paying for drugs and devices that work like Plan B.

Why pro-aborts can’t avoid occasionally sounding pro-life

It’s obvious why graphics like the above, quoting from Dr. Seuss’s classic children’s story Horton Hears a Who!, are popular in pro-life circles: it’s appealing to see a universally beloved cultural figure voice a simple truth with such obvious implications for the abortion debate.
Recently, I came across the below image on the Proudly Pro-Choice Tumblr, featuring a quote from Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, which holds a similar appeal:
The other side often complains about our use of such quotes,
particularly when the meaning we take from them allegedly contradicts
the pro-abortion views of their authors. PPC says:

I’m so sick of anti-choicers taking quotes out of context – this is from Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, which has nothing to do with abortion. Exactly like Dr. Seuss and his Horton Hears a Who. Stop it! You’re not accomplishing anything!
I also looked into Rowling a little – nothing about her being
pro-life but I did find some stuff that points to her being pro-choice.
So I have a feeling she probably wouldn’t want her book quotation being used in such a way.

I couldn’t find examples of Rowling directly discussing abortion, but she did declare she wanted a Democrat in the White House
and called Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton “extraordinary,” so killing
the unborn apparently doesn’t bother her much. As for Seuss, AKA
Theodor Geisel, his biographer Phillip Nel writes:

In fact, during his lifetime Seuss threatened to sue an anti-abortion group unless they took that off their stationery and they did take it off their stationery but it’s still used. I’ve still seen propaganda
in recent years from pro-life groups that have adopted Horton’s line,
‘A person’s a person, no matter how small.’ It’s one of the ways in
which Seuss has been misappropriated. He would not agree with that.

Former Seuss attorney Karl ZoBell says he cannot confirm the veracity of internet rumors that Geisel’s widow Audrey actively supports Planned Parenthood, but he does claim she was bothered by pro-life fliers distributed with the quote at the 2008 premiere of Horton’s big-screen adaptation: “She doesn’t like people to hijack Dr. Seuss characters or material to front their own points of view.”
So how is it that authors can give us such elegant affirmations of the pro-life ethic without actually being pro-life? Simple: the pro-life ethic is embedded in every affirmation of human decency – and tolerance for abortion is a massive, glaring affront to it.
Universal human equality, basic compassion for the weak, protection of the helpless, the ugliness of violence,
the unfathomable potential of every life…by default, each of these
values necessarily includes all human beings, including those in the
womb. It’s simply impossible to praise or promote any of these values
without tacitly paying lip service to the unborn.
First, to exclude the unborn, you have to consciously go out of your way. “Every human lifeexcept x, y, or z is worth the same, and worth saving.” In the case of Horton, not only do you have to add an exception, but you also have to remove “no matter how small” – half of the quote!
Second, there’s no way around the fact that accepting
abortion is an affront to all the other values we associate with basic
human dignity. If some of us may be killed by another human being for
any reason, we cannot be equal. Suctioning and slicing apart a tiny
human being can’t be considered “compassionate” per any sane
understanding of the term. The “pre-viability” argument for abortion
turns the idea of weakness on its head, changing it from sign of needing
protection into a license to kill. And the cheap rationalization that
“unwanted” or disabled babies wouldn’t have lives worth living anyway is
the ultimate in cynicism, a declaration that we’re all ultimately
hopeless slaves of circumstance.
Like it or not, these quotes are inherently pro-life, and pro-lifers
who use them as such are hardly guilty of twisting anything. If
anything, our only crime is assuming their own authors actually meant
what they wrote.

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Since the HHS Mandate requiring insurance coverage
of abortifacients, sterilization, and contraception was put forth over
two years ago, supporters have largely relied on misleading and
inaccurate statements to pretend the mandate is constitutional,
effective public policy, and does not fund abortions. See a few examples
here, here, and here.

Last week, the Supreme Court
heard arguments about the mandate. In those arguments, Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg and U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli joined the
mainstream media in promoting falsehoods about the Affordable Care Act and the mandate. (Verrilli argued for the mandate on behalf of the Obama administration.)

Ginsburg said that the mandate's parent law,
the Affordable Care Act, “passed overwhelmingly, both houses of
Congress. People from all sides of the political spectrum voted for it.”
When the law passed in the House of Representatives, zero Republicans voted for it and 34 Democrats voted against it. In the Senate, zero Republicans supported the Act.

Additionally, in each chamber the vote in favor was very close. In the
House, victory was gained by a mere seven votes out of 431 cast, and in
the Senate the margin of victory beat the GOP filibuster attempt by only two votes out of 99 cast.

On to Verrilli. Later on in the arguments, he said that no law "requires for-profit corporations to provide abortions." He claimed that the owners of Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Wood, the plaintiffs in the case, are sincere in their beliefs, but factually incorrect.
This statement flies in the face of what the Department of Health & Human Services' (HHS) Office of Women's Health says in a document on contraceptive devices. According to this agency, copper intrauterine devices and hormonal intrauterine devices cause abortions by preventing a fertilized egg -- also known as a brand-new human being -- from implanting in the uterus.
There is strong evidence indicating that Ella and Plan B cause abortions, which means Verrilli's dismissal of such concerns is doubly disturbing.

The HHS Mandate has been controversial since the day it was introduced, using government policy to put those who believe birth control, abortions, and sterilization are moral above those who have moral opposition to their use. And while the misleading and dishonest statements from the media are problematic in their own way, Ginsburg and Verrilli are public employees. They should be focused on defending truth, justice, and the Constitution, not political agendas that directly contradict their oaths of office.Note: The Public Affairs Office
of the Department of Justice ignored multiple requests for comment
about Verrilli's statement and where his information came from. A "public affairs specialist" did reach out in response to the requests, but no comment or information was provided.

The Atlantic’s Abortion Doula: ‘Grief is Celebratory’

Normally, a “doula” is a woman who assists other women with birth. But Roc Morin, writing for The Atlantic,
found a “full-spectrum doula.” “On Being an Abortion Doula” was about
Annie Robinson, and explored the “range of emotions involved in helping
women terminate pregnancies.” Robinson told Morin that “the grief is celebratory” and that “some of the connections [with women aborting] are really joyful, and funny, and loving.”
To explain her attraction to her work, Robinson detailed how “I’m really interested in loss and grief.”
She acknowledged that “Even if the grief is celebratory, it still is
grief and it still is loss.” She argued that birth isn’t that much
different: “There’s something lost with birth too—loss of pregnancy,
loss of the in-utero experience.”

Robinson volunteers for The Doula Project, an “organization that provides free compassionate care
and emotional, physical, and informational support to people across the
spectrum of pregnancy.” The organization began in 2007 to aid women
undergoing abortions by offering doulas who “commit themselves fully to
the women they serve and to supporting each other through challenging,
beautiful, and emotionally overwhelming moments.”
Morin asked Robinson, “Why is the work of The Doula Project important?” Robinson responded,
“when you’re going through something that’s morally and physically
exhausting and confusing, it’s so important to be seen—to have your
emotions and your physical being recognized and acknowledged.”

At Morin’s prompting, Robinson stressed how emotions flow from her patients to her. “I feel a heaviness. I feel saturated sometimes. I feel lit
up and glowing,” she began. “Often I feel like I’m glowing from being
there in such a real moment. Some of the connections are really joyful,
and funny, and loving. It’s not just a gloomy dreary period of time that
we spend together.”
Morin then asked Robinson a series of strange questions, as though
wondering about some rumored but seldom glimpsed primitive tribe. “How
aware are you of your opposition, the pro-life movement?” “How do you
relate to those people?” “How do you think they came to their
perspective?”Robinson’s answers don’t matter – suffice it to say she thinks anti-abortion activists are misinformed. What matters is the fact that Morin treats the pro-life half of the U.S. population like some sort of cargo cult,
and does so in a magazine that calls itself a “source of opinion,
commentary, and analysis for America’s most influential individuals who
wish to be challenged, informed, and entertained.”

So abortion can be included in a list of life’s “challenging,
beautiful, and emotionally overwhelming moments,” but Morin can’t
imagine how pro-lifers came to their conclusions? God save us from America’s most influential individuals.
Editor’s note. This appeared at http://newsbusters.org/blogs/katie-yoder/2014/03/27/atlantic-s-abortion-doula-grief-celebratory

Support for ObamaCare at 26%, lowest ever

By Dave AndruskoLet’s take time to see if we can reconcile the two halves of this sentence. (It’s the lead from a story from the Associated Press.)

“Despite a late surge in sign-ups, support for President Barack Obama’s
health care law is languishing at its lowest level since passage of the
landmark legislation four years ago, according to a new poll.”

(That “lowest level” of support is a near rock-bottom 26%. More about that momentarily.)
One explanation is that people are so frightened by the uncertainty that is Obamacare, including a series of bogus “deadlines,” they are actually signing up.
Another more likely explanation is (as Tom Blumer suggests) that the latest “surge” is more camouflage.

If you are an Obama supporter—and especially if you are a Democrat who favors ObamaCare, let alone voted for it–the latest AP-Gfk survey numbers are truly scary.
But before take a peak at the numbers, there’s this amusing (attempted) caveat from AP. “The poll was taken before Thursday’s announcement by the White House that new health insurance
markets have surpassed the goal of 6 million sign-ups, so it did not
register the potential impact of that news on public opinion.”
All I can say is, if you believe that– after unyielding public opposition from Day One to ObamaCare– you’ll believe anything.
Okay, back to the numbers.
It’s not just that support is far outdistanced by opposition (43% to 26%), it’s the famous intensityfactor.
The 26% approval is split exactly in half. 13% somewhat support and 13% strongly support.
By contrast of the 43% in opposition, only 12% somewhat oppose ObamaCare compared to 31% who strongly oppose.

Put these numbers together with what we talked about Thursday (Public’s “Disapproval of Obama’s Job Performance Reaches All-Time High”).
Nearly six in ten (59%) disapprove of Mr. Obama’s job performance,
according to an Associated Press/ GFK survey. Just 41% expressed
approval. Moreover a majority do not support him personally (51%). Only
42% of the 1,012 people surveyed do.
No wonder Democrats are distancing themselves from Obama.

Mouse cloning advance raises specter of human cloning

By Wesley J. Smith.I have long believed and argued that stem cell research
is merely the opening stanza of a longer planned biotechnological
symphony. What “the scientists” are really after is a reliable way to
conduct human cloning.
Without cloning, and you might get effective medical treatments from all kinds of stem cells–both ethical and unethical. With cloning, it is Brave New World time, baby!
Cloning science might
have taken a huge step forward with the announcement of a successful
mouse experiment in which two-celled embryos were destroyed and each
cell subjected to the same cloning process used to make Dolly the sheep (somatic cell nuclear transfer). From the LA Times story:

“In a paper published Wednesday in the journal Nature, researchers said they had successfully generated embryonic stem cells using fertilized mouse embryos — a feat that many scientists had thought was impossible. …

“If successful, the development would allow the use of ‘excess’ human eggs that are retrieved and fertilized during in vitro fertilization treatments, but never used. Senior study author Shoukhrat Mitalipov, a cell biologist at Oregon Health and Science University, says his lab now wants to reproduce their success, ‘first in a monkey and later with human embryos.’”

See, how the media
mislead in these issues? The materials used wouldn’t be excess “eggs.”
Once eggs are fertilized they aren’t eggs anymore. They would be excess
embryos–e.g., nascent human life.
Here’s how the new technique would be performed:

Destroy early embryos–either those frozen or made for the purpose;

Take the embryonic cells and remove the nuclei;

Insert a nucleus taken from cells of the person being cloned into each embryonic cell;

That would result in a new cloned embryo(s);

Allow the cloned embryo(s) to develop ten days in a dish to the blastocyst stage;

Destroy the new cloned embryos for their embryonic stem cells, and/or

Implant the embryos in a uterus or substitute therefore and gestate for fetal farming or to birth for reproductive cloning.

This breakthrough could be important because is a potential way to do
away with the need for eggs currently required in every cloning
attempt–-and given the egg dearth, a resource problem that has
materially held back the sector.
We still don’t know if
the technique will work in humans. And we don’t know if the technique
will be successful on human embryos beyond the two-celled stage, which
most frozen embryos are.
But this I do know: The time to outlaw all forms of human cloning is now–not later when it becomes too late!Editor’s note. This appeared on Wesley’s blog.

5th Circuit upholds challenged portions of Texas’ pro-life H.B. 2

By Dave Andrusko

Judge Edith Jones

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the 5th Circuit Thursday unanimously upheld provisions of Texas’
H.B. 2 that had been challenged by the Planned Parenthood Federation of
America, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Center for Reproductive
Rights, and several Texas abortion clinics.
At issue was a requirement that abortionists have admittingprivileges to a hospital located within 30 miles of the abortion clinic and how far into pregnancy chemical abortifacients can be administered.
Other provisions of the law went into effect without challenge (the Pain-Capable Unborn ChildProtection Act),
or do not take effect until September (a requirement that abortions
clinics meet the standards of ambulatory surgical centers). The latter
could well be challenged by pro-abortionists.

Judge Catharina Haynes

As NRL News Today reported last October (nrlc.cc/1h3hPmq and nrlc.cc/1h3hwrV), Austin-based U.S. District Judge
Lee Yeakel declared that “the act’s admitting-privileges provision is
without a rational basis and places a substantial obstacle in the path
of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus.”

HB 2 also requires that the abortionist be in the same room as the
woman receiving the chemical abortifacients (which is not the case with
so-called ‘web-cam” abortions) and that abortionists follow the protocol
approved by the FDA for the use of the two-drug “RU-486” abortion technique.
Yeakel held that it was not an “undue burden” on a woman’s right to abort for Texas
to require that abortionists use the FDA protocol that limits the
technique to the first 49 days [seven weeks], but would be in special
cases where the pregnancy fell between 50-63 days [eight to nine weeks].
Three days after Yeakel issued his ruling, a different 5th Circuit panel
allowed Texas to enforce the law while it was being appealed.
Plaintiffs quickly asked the Supreme Court for a stay, but on November
28 the Supreme Court Supreme Court voted not to block (“stay”) the appeals court’s action allowing the law to be enforced.

Judge Jennifer Walker Elrod

In their 34-page opinion, Judges Edith Jones, Catharina Haynes, and
Jennifer Walker Elrod carefully outlined why the provisions are not an
“undue burden” on the right to abortion. Their explanations were
typically reduced to a sentence or two in most news stories which missed altogether how the judges came to the conclusions they did.

For example, you would get the impression that there are virtually
never any complications from an abortion. Jones, who wrote the opinion,
noted that “Planned Parenthood conceded that at least 210 women in Texas
annually must be hospitalized after seeking an abortion.”
“Witnesses on both sides further testified that some of the women who are hospitalized after an abortion
have complications that require an OB/GYN specialist’s treatment,”
Jones added. “Against Planned Parenthood’s claims that these women can
be adequately treated without the admitting-privileges requirement, the
state showed that many hospitals lack an Ob/Gyn on call for
emergencies.”

Continuity of care was
one of the key reasons the law intends that the abortionist be able to
go with the woman to the hospital if there is a complication. Testimony
pointed to studies that concluded that “80 percent of serious medical
errors involve miscommunication between caregivers when patients are
transferred or handed-off.”

Jones noted that the state of Texas had articulated a rational basis
for the law and that the plaintiffs had not attacked the State’s
purposes “at all.” But, she explained, plaintiffs could still prevail
“if the effect of the law substantially burdened women’s access to
abortions in Texas.” The three-judge panel found the law did not do so.

“Although some clinics
may be required to shut their doors there is no showing whatsoever that a
woman will lack reasonable access to a clinic in Texas,” Jones wrote.
For example, “In a number of areas in Texas, physicians who are
performing abortion already have admitting privileges.” With respect to
the difficulty one abortion clinic owner said she had in recruiting new
abortionists, Jones noted that “all told” only one of the physicians she
had contacted “declined to provide abortions in Texas as a consequence
of H.R. 2.”
Jones concluded

“The evidence presented to the
district court [to Judge Yeakel] demonstrates that if the
admitting-privileges regulation burdens abortion access by diminishing
the number of doctors who will perform abortions and requiring women to
travel farther, the burden does not fall on the vast majority of Texas
women seeking abortions. Put otherwise, the regulation will not affect a
significant (much less ‘large’) fraction of such women [women seeking
abortions in a given area of Texas], and it imposes on other women in
Texas less of a burden than the waiting-period provisions upheld” in the
Supreme Court’s “Casey” decision.

The panel also reversed Judge Yeakel, who disagreed with H.B. 2’s
requirement that chemical abortions (“medication abortions”) be limited
to the first seven weeks [49 days] of pregnancy.
H.B. 2 “merely shortens the window during which a woman may elect to
have a medication abortion, leaving open the possibility for any woman
to have a medication abortion up to forty-nine days LMP (Last Menstrual
Period],” Jones explained.
Planned Parenthood’s Cecile Richards told reporters, “This is a
terrible court ruling that will severely limit a woman’s access to safe
and legal abortion in Texas.”
By contrast, “This unanimous decision is a vindication of the careful
deliberation by the Texas Legislature to craft a law to protect the
health and safety of Texas women,” said Texas Attorney General Greg
Abbott, whose office defended the law in court.

University exhibit touts abortion as “Life-Sustaining Act”

By Dave AndruskoWell…. it’s not as though the University of Michigan’s
Program for Sexual Rights and Reproductive Justice, the Department of
Obstetrics and Gynecology, and the Penny W. Stamps School of Art &
Design has us in mind when they put together the “4000 Years for Choice:
A Graphic Guide to Reproductive Justice” exhibit.
But even so, wow!
Let’s amble over the Women’s Study page and learn about the exhibition which runs through May 29:

“Heather Ault is a visual artist,
pro-choice activist, and independent scholar creating artwork to shift
conversations about reproductive rights and justice. Her work has been
exhibited throughout the country. In 2011 she won the Vision Award from
the Abortion Care Network for her innovative work.”

So what will we see?

“An exhibition of posters about the age-old practices of abortion
and contraception as a means to reclaim reproductive freedom as a
deeply personal and life-sustaining act existing throughout all of human
history. The ‘Reproductive Roots’ series shines a bright light on the
many voices from the abortion care and reproductive justice movements
using vividly designed social media graphics and notecards to inspire conversations from a breadth of perspectives.”

Hmm. Okay. If we click on the project website (4000yearsforchoice.com), we learn about some very old stuff
(an ancient abortifacient comprised of “crocodile feces, mixed with
fermented dough, and placed in the vagina”). and very new (a collection
of Wendy Davis-inspired “Apparel: Tees, Hoodies, and Totes”).

What about the notecards?
Here’s one. “I didn’t see it as killing a Baby—I was simply giving the
life within me back to God to protect and hold onto until the right
time.” And, presumably, if “Kristin” becomes pregnant again (at the
wrong time), she’ll place some other hapless baby in a kind of New Age holding pen.

In the same vein, we read, “Abortion is a gift from God”; “I had an abortion last year and it was the best decision of my life” (“Isha”): and “We really need to get over this love affair with the fetus and start worrying about children”—the [in]famous quote from Dr. Joyce Elders, who was President Bill Clinton’s Surgeon General for a year.

One reviewer (from “Journey of Young Women Facebook Community”) said this:

“4000 Years for Choice makes my heart sing. I am so grateful. It is an opportunity to look at the big picture,
the historical picture, even the spiritual picture ~ all of which
unambiguously show that women’s choice is inalienable and life–serving.”

Only in the morally anachronistic backwaters of the zealot’s mind
could something as brutal, as vicious, and as painful as abortion “make
my heart sing.”

Friday, March 28, 2014

“Team Oz” Helps Woman Starve to Death

By Wesley J. Smith

Dorothy Conlon in Dubrovnik, Croatia in 2009.

I remember early in my anti-euthanasia activism being approached by a Hemlock Society member
after a speech. “How do you envision your death, Mr. Smith?” she asked
sweetly. I could only shake my head. “Ma’am,” I replied. “I’m trying to
envision my life. My death will take care of itself.”
That experience taught me that some believers of assisted suicide are obsessed with dying. More evidence: A healthy elderly woman
named Dorothy Conlon–a member of the Hemlock Society Compassion and
Choices and devotee of assisted suicide–decided she wanted to die by
self-starvation because she could no longer travel the world and worried about being in a nursing home.
A decent response would be to get help for the woman to live! But no:
A group of “friends” decided to help her starve to death. From the Sarasota Herald Tribune story, entitled as so many such articles are, “Dorothy’s Choice:”

Conlon began to formalize what she
called her “G2G” (“Good to Go”) plan, and to assemble volunteers who
would become her “Team Oz.” (“Get it?” she would say gleefully. “Oz?
Dorothy? Somewhere over the rainbow?”)

Eventually the team consisted of four
women: Helen, who had met Dorothy through the church in 1989 though she
was no longer a member; Susan, nearing 70, a former
psychotherapist and Conlon’s massage and Reiki therapist; Heather, 53, a
member of the meditation group Conlon regularly participated in; and
Carmen, a longtime neighbor and friend of 25 years, who was already
established as Conlon’s health care surrogate.

None considered themselves intimate friends, but all fulfilled her essential requirements:
They approved of her right to make the decision and promised to help
her accomplish it, while pledging to refrain from pursuing any medical intervention.

I’m sorry–-actually, I’m not–-but what kind of people
would agree to participate and assist in such a horrible endeavor? Why
not just pull out the chair to help her hang herself or close the garage
door after she started her car?
Look how they romanticized what they thought would happen:

Susan had presumed she would quietly
and calmly perform Reiki or massage. Heather anticipated her friend
might open up at last and talk about her sons and her marriage.
Helen, with whom Conlon had shared more intimate conversations, figured
she would just “hang out” and keep her friend company. And Carmen, who
would be on an out-of-town trip for the first 10 days of the process,
secretly hoped that Conlon might pass peacefully before she returned

It wasn’t pretty:

As the days went on, “Team Oz”
frayed. Not quite two weeks into the process, Conlon was increasingly
agitated and her caretakers debilitated, drained and overwhelmed
emotionally and physically. At least one team member felt an urge to
call 911, but squelched the impulse after one of the others acknowledged it was too late to restore Conlon to health.

“I think this is a real dilemma that would challenge anybody’s morality,” says Tidewell’s Angsten of responsibility the team members
assumed. “Then, to watch someone suffer adds a whole other dimension.”
Since calling in medical personnel went against everyone’s vow to
respect Conlon’s wishes, Carmen looked elsewhere for support.

Even after death, the terminal nonjudgmentalism is so thick you can eat it with a fork:

At 5:48 a.m. the next morning, Helen
and Samantha remember waking abruptly from a deep sleep at their
respective homes. Conlon was still warm to the touch when they arrived
shortly after. She had one arm raised above her head, as if waving to
someone. There was a faint upward curve to her lips. “She looked very
peaceful,” said another friend, who assisted with calling a doctor to
obtain a death certificate.

“She was entirely in control to the
end and ultimately, it was the dignified death she wanted.” And yet, for
everyone involved, an unease lingered. “I admire what she did,” the
friend concluded. “But I think it was a very hard way to do it.”

At least a few saw the selfishness in Dorothy’s approach, not that it mattered:

No one had a change of mind about
their support of Conlon’s choice and her right to make it. But they all
agreed they would never again offer to help in a similar circumstance.

“It did not change my views morally,
spiritually or ethically at all, but if someone asked me to do this
again, I’d tell them I want no part of it,” says Helen. “I’d strongly
suggest they look into all the reasons they want to leave — and then
that they get some goddamn pills.”

Carmen remembers sitting in her car
one day after pulling into her driveway, watching and listening to the
rain and thinking how much she valued living. “I don’t think Dorothy
ever considered the burden you are putting on people by asking them to
help,” she says. “It’s heavy, even just the knowledge of it.

I would not offer to do this again.”
Like the others, Heather, who is dealing with a parent suffering from
dementia, believes there should be a better option than the one Conlon
chose, one that is legal and swiftly accomplished.

Right. Because the death obsession is the all-important point! And
the media, as here, is increasingly complicit in pushing suicide memes.
What can I say, folks? This is what we are becoming.

By Paul StarkThe international abortion
advocacy organization Ipas helped convene a meeting this week calling
for governments to “repeal laws that criminalize abortion and remove
barriers on women’s and girls’ access to safe abortion services,” making “safe, legal abortion
universally available, accessible and affordable for all women and
girls.” The conference attendees say abortion must be legalized to
“sav[e] women’s lives.”
That is false. Maternal health depends far more on the quality of medical care (and related factors) than on the legal status or availability of abortion. Consider:
Maternal mortality declined dramatically in the developed world as a result of advancements in modern medicine that took place before the widespread legalization of abortion.
Today Ireland, Poland, Malta and Chile significantly restrict or prohibit abortion and yet have very low maternal mortality ratios.

Among the few countries that achieved a 75 percent reduction in their maternal mortality ratios (a target of Millennium Development Goal 5) by 2010, Maldives, Bhutan and the Islamic Republic of Iran did so while generally prohibiting abortion.

After Chile banned abortion in 1989, its maternal mortality ratio continued
to decline significantly and at about the same rate, dropping 69.2
percent over the next 14 years, according to a 2012 study by Elard Koch,
et al. Even maternal deaths due specifically to abortion declined—from
10.78 abortion deaths per 100,000 live births in 1989 to 0.83 in 2007, a
reduction of 92.3 percent after abortion was made illegal.

Legalizing abortion, the Chilean study’s authors conclude, is
demonstrably unnecessary for the improvement of maternal health and the saving of women’s lives.
In fact, legalizing or expanding abortion can be detrimental to the health and safety
of pregnant women. Abortion poses physical and psychological risks.
These risks include immediate complications such as hemorrhage,
infection and death as well as long-term risks such as breast cancer.
A wealth of worldwide research has established that abortion increases the risk of subsequent preterm birth, which can cause death or disability in newborn children. Abortion is also associated with a variety of psychological and social problems, including depression, drug abuse and suicide.
The health risks of abortion are exacerbated in countries where basic health care
is lacking. The legalization or expansion of abortion in such countries
can increase the incidence of abortion, increasing the number of women
subjected to the risks of abortion.
The evidence shows that better maternal health care, not abortion, is the way to save lives.Editor’s note. Paul Stark is Communications Associate for Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life, NRLC’s state affiliate. This appeared at prolifemn.blogspot.com.

By Ken Shepherd“More time for health sign-up” cheered the Washington Post
front-page headline for Amy Goldstein’s March 26 story on the
administration’s latest ObamaCare delay, this time for the individual
mandate which requires Americans to be insured so as to avoid paying a
“tax” penalty. In an amazing dereliction of her journalistic duty, Goldstein utterly failed to mention that just two weeks earlier HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius testified to Congress that, in fact, the March 31 sign-up deadline was not going to move.
Goldstein, of course, was too busy parroting the administration’s talking points and turning to supposedly non-ideological “consumer advocates” who hailed the deadline extension (emphasis mine):

The Obama administration has decided to give extra time to Americans who say that they are unable to enroll in health plans through the federal insurance marketplace by the March 31 deadline.

Federal
officials confirmed Tuesday evening that all consumers who have begun
to apply for coverage on HealthCare.gov, but who do not finish by
Monday, will have until about mid-April to ask for an extension.

Under the new rules, people will be able to qualify for an extension by checking
a blue box on HealthCare.gov to indicate that they tried to enroll
before the deadline. This method will rely on an honor system; the
government will not try to determine whether the person is telling the truth.

The rules, which will apply to the federal exchanges operating in three dozen states, will essentially create a large loophole even as White House
officials have repeatedly said that the March 31 deadline was firm. The
extra time will not technically alter the deadline but will create a
broad new category of people eligible for what’s known as a special
enrollment period.

The change, which the administration is scheduled to announce Wednesday, is supported by consumer advocates who want as many people as possible to gain insurance under the 2010 Affordable Care Act.
But it’s likely to be criticized by Republicans who oppose the law and
have denounced the way the administration is implementing it.

[...]

According to a Health and Human Services official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity about decisions that have not been made public, an exact time frame for this extension has not been set, and it will depend in part on how many people request it. Nor have officials decided precisely how long people will have to select a health plan after they get the extra time.

[...]

The constituency that has been most wary of extra sign-up time has been the insurance
industry. Insurance firms selling plans in the new marketplace want to
minimize the possibility that people might wait to get coverage until
they become sick — a practice that would undermine the central idea of
keeping costs in check by balancing people who are expensive to insure
with those who are healthy and require little medical treatment.

On the other hand, consumer advocates say it is important to give as many people as possible a chance to obtain insurance.

“The whole point of the thing is to get people covered,” said Jon Kingsdale, a health-care consultant and former director of Massachusetts’s insurance exchange,
which was the first in the country, opening several years before the
federal law set up a similar national marketplace. “In the first year,
there has been so much confusion, I think it’s only natural there will
be people who just don’t feel as if they fully understood what the law
was and what they were supposed to do and that the opportunity would
close.”

Nowhere in her piece does Goldstein have any curiosity about what
statutory authority the HHS has, if any, to grant this delay, nor does
she wonder about the disparate impact which may befall Americans whereby
some might be fined for not having obtained coverage by April 1 —
because they live in states with state-run exchanges which are adhering
to the deadline — and those who live in states lacking a state exchange
and hence are given a reprieve thanks to the federal extension.
Over at the New York Times, writer Robert Pear had a similarly
obsequious work of stenography with his front-page 16-paragraph story
“U.S. to Extend Sign-Up Period for Insurance.”Like the Post’s Goldstein,
Pear failed to mention Sebelius’s insistence on March 12 that the March
31 deadline was set in stone, although he did mention that the HHS head
“has said repeatedly that the federal website has been repaired and is
ready to handle a surge of applications expected just before the
deadline.”
But alas, “White House officials and some technology experts working
on the exchange began to worry that the website might freeze up if the
demand exceeded expectations,” Pear noted, adding later that such
website snafus “could create a political fiasco for Mr. Obama and other
Democrats, just as they were recovering from the damage done when the
site left millions of Americans frustrated in October.”

Well, that makes amending the law by administrative fiat on a whim perfectly kosher then!
Like Goldstein, Pear opted to close his story with a cheerleader for the latest ObamaCare
delay, noting one Brian Haile of Jackson Hewitt Tax Service who “said
the new special enrollment period was ‘a win for uninsured Americans’”
because, apparently, “[t]axpayers are more willing and able to sign up
as they receive tax refunds.”
Perhaps the president and his congressional allies should have
thought of that when they crafted the deadline in the first place,
synchronizing it with April 15, the federal tax filing deadline, rather than falling a fortnight earlier.

At any rate, it’s abundantly clear that both the Times and the Post
have little if any interest in holding the Obama administration
accountable for its ongoing project of furiously revising the ACA on the
fly with ad-hoc rule changes and deadline shifts of dubious legality.Editor’s note. This appeared at newsbusters.org.

Pope Francis, President Obama meet at Vatican

By Dave AndruskoNot
to be overly cynical, but if I was President Obama (with every kind of
approval index mired in the high 30s and low 40s), I know I would like
to bask in the reflected glow of Pope Francis, whose popularity is
double that of the beleaguered President.
So far not a lot has come out about the 52-minute meeting Thursday
between Pope Francis and President Obama. Mr. Obama expressed his
appreciation for the meeting, the first with Pope Francis and the second
the President has had with a Pope. (The first was with Pope Benedict
XVI in 2009, “a cordial meeting that nevertheless drew attention to the
differences between the church and Obama on abortion,” as Fox News
noted.)
“I was grateful to have the opportunity to speak with him about the
responsibilities that we all share to care for the least of these, the
poor, the excluded,” Obama said today. “And I was extremely moved by his
insights about the importance of us all having a moral perspective on
world problems and not simply thinking in terms of our own narrow
self-interests.”

The Vatican put out a brief statement. “Views were exchanged on some
current international themes,” the statement read. “[T]here was a
discussion on questions of particular relevance for the Church in that
country, such as the exercise of the rights to religious freedom, life
and conscientious objection, as well as the issue of immigration
reform.”
Other accounts, such as Doyle McManus for the Los Angeles Times and
John Allen for the Boston Globe, both read between the lines and
reminded readers that there are serious differences between this
Administration and Rome.

Allen, for example reminded us that “Aside from the broad clash
between Obama’s support for abortion rights and the Catholic church’s
opposition,” the meeting at the Vatican comes two days after the Supreme
Court heard oral arguments in two lawsuits challenging the Obama
mandate that compels employers to provide health coverage for drugs and
procedures , including contraceptives, to which they have moral or
religious objections.

“Sharp differences on that score still loom over the administration’s relationship with the church,” Allen reported.
McManus noted that just as Obama gave an interview with a newspaper
in Rome prior to the meeting, so, too, did the Vatican media office
issue a statement before the Pope and the President met. It noted that
the two men were meeting during “a complex phase of the administration’s
relations with the Church of the United States, marked, in particular,
by controversy on the implementation of health care reform (the ‘Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act,’ commonly known as ‘Obamacare’)…”

Of the stories I read, only McManus noted the significance of Pope’s
parting gift to the President: “a bound copy of his 2013 letter to the
faithful, ‘The Joy of the Gospel’ — the one that became famous for its
critique of trickle-down economics.”

McManus wrote that Obama said, “I actually will probably read this in
the Oval Office when I’m deeply frustrated,” and added, “I’m sure it
will give me strength and calm me down.”
But “If the president actually does read the pontiff’s letter, he’ll
find that though it’s joyful, it isn’t always comforting,” McManus
observed. “[T]here’s also a strong reminder that the church still
believes that there are ‘objective moral norms which are valid for
everyone.’ And there’s a full-throated defense of traditional Catholic
teaching on abortion, which Francis complains is too often criticized as
‘ideological, obscurantist and conservative.’”

He then quotes from what Pope Francis wrote in “The Joy of the Gospel”:“This defense of unborn life is closely linked to the defense of
each and every other human right,” the pope argues. “Once this
conviction disappears, so do solid and lasting foundations for the
defense of human rights, which would always be subject to the passing
whims of the powers that be.”

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Unmasking the push to terminate children with Down syndrome

By Nancy FlandersIn Australia, much like the United States,
only 5.3% of people diagnosed in the womb with Down syndrome are
actually born. About 95% of people with Down syndrome are never given
the chance to live their lives. That means 95% of parents who receive
such a diagnosis for their child have given in to their fears and now
live everyday with the pain of having ended their child’s life.News.com.au asks, “Is this the beginning of the end for Down syndrome?” And it very well could be.
In the article, which first appeared in QWeekend Magazine, the author visits with families of children and adults
with Down syndrome. Each admitted to having initially struggled with
the diagnosis, whether it came during the pregnancy or at birth. But
none regretted their child, each boasting about their child’s
accomplishments – from the five-year-old little girl learning to write
to the adult who participates in international competitive swimming.
Each of their stories leaves you wondering, what’s the big societal
problem with people with Down syndrome?
There isn’t one.
Our society is overall supportive of everyone with any type of disability or health condition.
From inclusive education to Special Olympics, the majority of us now
treat people with different abilities with respect and kindness. Unless
of course, those people are still in their mother’s womb.
It’s the common “out of sight, out of mind” mentality. If I can’t see it, it isn’t really happening.
But these are real people
we’re talking about. Actual lives that are being ended because they
have Down syndrome. There is no other reason. And just as society
discriminated against people with Down syndrome in the past by labeling
them “idiots” and placing them in institutions, society today
discriminates against them by telling their parents to kill them.
Despite the fact that there are new medical
technologies to help them live healthier and longer lives. Despite the
fact that there are numerous programs to help them lead more fulfilling
lives. And despite the fact that families of people with Down syndrome
and people with Down syndrome themselves report being happy with their
lives.
Despite all of these advances and improved life outcomes, we no longer institutionalize people with Down syndrome, we actually kill them.

And it’s all thanks to pre-natal testing. And the less invasive and expensive it gets, the more people will die. Isn’t that the opposite of what medical advances are meant to do?
Instead of doctors informing parents of all the resources available to them and their child, they tell them only of the stereotypical negatives
that are often associated with the condition. And they advise the
parents to abort. One mother, Angela, says that her doctors were
brilliant, however there was “overwhelmingly negative” advice being
thrown at her and her husband. She was even told to leave her daughter
behind and just walk away.

Parents, lost momentarily in their fears and mourning for the child they had planned on, can be too emotionally distraught to make a clear decision about their child’s life, and most end up aborting. Many will carry that pain with them through the rest of their lives.
We have to ask ourselves, are the medical field and society doing parents a disservice when we talk about abortion in cases of fetal abnormalities?
Are we denying parents and entire families the joys that come with
parenting, the triumphs that come with struggles, and the pride that
comes with watching your child succeed when no one thought they would?
By denying people with Down syndrome their very lives, are we denying
ourselves happiness? Are we denying the evolution of a compassionate
society? Are we headed backwards in our quest for diversity, inclusion
and acceptance?

If the only words a doctor can offer her patients who receive the
news of a pre-natal Down syndrome diagnosis are, “I’m sorry” and “You
can terminate,”
than yes, the medical community is causing emotional and mental harm to
parents. And society is backing it up by repeatedly arguing for the
right to allow abortion especially in the cases of humans with
disabilities.
Call it bullying. Call it misguided intentions. But in the end,
there’s a human being who has been denied his or her life and two
parents who are suffering with the guilt. And this is only on track to
continue until there is no longer a single person with Down syndrome on
the planet. So much for inclusion and acceptance.

Editor’s note. Nancy is a work at home mom who writes about
parenting, special needs children, and the right to life. She is the
lucky mother of three spirited little girls, one who has cystic
fibrosis, and she spends any free moment she can find fundraising for a
cure for CF. This appeared at liveactionnews.org.